scholarly journals Reaction Mechanisms of Pol IV, RDR2, and DCL3 Drive RNA Channeling in the siRNA-Directed DNA Methylation Pathway

2019 ◽  
Vol 75 (3) ◽  
pp. 576-589.e5 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jasleen Singh ◽  
Vibhor Mishra ◽  
Feng Wang ◽  
Hsiao-Yun Huang ◽  
Craig S. Pikaard
2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jasleen Singh ◽  
Vibhor Mishra ◽  
Feng Wang ◽  
Hsiao-Yun Huang ◽  
Craig S. Pikaard

SummaryIn eukaryotes with multiple small RNA pathways the mechanisms that channel RNAs within specific pathways are unclear. Here, we reveal the reactions that account for channeling in the siRNA biogenesis phase of the Arabidopsis RNA-directed DNA methylation pathway. The process begins with template DNA transcription by NUCLEAR RNA POLYMERASE IV (Pol IV) whose atypical termination mechanism, induced by nontemplate DNA basepairing, channels transcripts to the associated RNA-dependent RNA polymerase, RDR2. RDR2 converts Pol IV transcripts into double-stranded RNAs then typically adds an extra untemplated 3’ terminal nucleotide to the second strands. The dicer endonuclease, DCL3 cuts resulting duplexes to generate 24 and 23nt siRNAs. The 23nt RNAs bear the untemplated terminal nucleotide of the RDR2 strand and are underrepresented among ARGONAUTE4-associated siRNAs. Collectively, our results provide mechanistic insights into Pol IV termination, Pol IV-RDR2 coupling and RNA channeling from template DNA transcription to siRNA guide strand/passenger strand discrimination.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhenxing Wang ◽  
Nicolas Butel ◽  
Juan Santos-González ◽  
Lauriane Simon ◽  
Cecilia Wärdig ◽  
...  

AbstractHybridization of plants that differ in number of chromosome sets (ploidy) frequently causes endosperm failure and seed arrest, a phenomenon referred to as triploid block. Mutation in NRPD1, encoding the largest subunit of the plant-specific RNA Polymerase IV (Pol IV), can suppress the triploid block. Pol IV generates short RNAs required to guide de novo methylation in the RNA-directed DNA methylation (RdDM) pathway. In this study, we found that the ability of mutants in the RdDM pathway to suppress the triploid block depends on their degree of inbreeding. While nrpd1 is able to suppress in the first homozygous generation, mutants in RDR2, NRPE1, and DRM2 require at least one additional round of inbreeding to exert a suppressive effect. Inbreeding of nrpd1 was connected with a transgenerational loss of non-CG DNA methylation on sites jointly regulated by CHROMOMETHYLASES 2 and 3. Our data thus reveal that loss of RdDM function differs in its effect in early and late generations and that Pol IV acts at an early stage of triploid block establishment.One-sentence summaryInbreeding of mutants impaired in RdDM components transgenerationally enhanced their ability to suppress the triploid block.


2019 ◽  
Vol 47 (17) ◽  
pp. 9024-9036 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jered M Wendte ◽  
Jeremy R Haag ◽  
Olga M Pontes ◽  
Jasleen Singh ◽  
Sara Metcalf ◽  
...  

Abstract In plants, nuclear multisubunit RNA polymerases IV and V are RNA Polymerase II-related enzymes that synthesize non-coding RNAs for RNA-directed DNA methylation (RdDM) and transcriptional gene silencing. Here, we tested the importance of the C-terminal domain (CTD) of Pol IV’s largest subunit given that the Pol II CTD mediates multiple aspects of Pol II transcription. We show that the CTD is dispensable for Pol IV catalytic activity and Pol IV termination-dependent activation of RNA-DEPENDENT RNA POLYMERASE 2, which partners with Pol IV to generate dsRNA precursors of the 24 nt siRNAs that guide RdDM. However, 24 nt siRNA levels decrease ∼80% when the CTD is deleted. RNA-dependent cytosine methylation is also reduced, but only ∼20%, suggesting that siRNA levels typically exceed the levels needed for methylation of most loci. Pol IV-dependent loci affected by loss of the CTD are primarily located in chromosome arms, similar to loci dependent CLSY1/2 or SHH1, which are proteins implicated in Pol IV recruitment. However, deletion of the CTD does not phenocopy clsy or shh1 mutants, consistent with the CTD affecting post-recruitment aspects of Pol IV activity at target loci.


Epigenetics ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 29-33 ◽  
Author(s):  
Israel Ausin ◽  
Maxim V.C. Greenberg ◽  
Carey Fei Li ◽  
Steven E Jacobsen

2013 ◽  
Vol 110 (20) ◽  
pp. 8290-8295 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Zhang ◽  
Z.-Y. Ma ◽  
L. Zeng ◽  
K. Tanaka ◽  
C.-J. Zhang ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Akihito Fukudome ◽  
Jasleen Singh ◽  
Vibhor Mishra ◽  
Eswar Reddem ◽  
Francisco Martinez-Marquez ◽  
...  

AbstractRNA-dependent RNA polymerases play essential roles in RNA-mediated gene silencing in eukaryotes. In Arabidopsis, RNA-DEPENDENT RNA POLYMERASE 2 (RDR2) physically interacts with DNA-dependent NUCLEAR RNA POLYMERASE IV (Pol IV) and their activities are tightly coupled, with Pol IV transcriptional arrest or termination, involving the nontemplate DNA strand, somehow enabling RDR2 to engage Pol IV transcripts and generate double-stranded RNAs. The dsRNAs are then released from the Pol IV-RDR2 complex and diced into siRNAs that guide RNA-directed DNA methylation and silencing. Here we report the structure of full-length RDR2, at an overall resolution of 3.1 Å, determined by cryo-electron microscopy. The N-terminal region contains an RNA-recognition motif (RRM) adjacent to a positively charged channel that leads to a catalytic center with striking structural homology to the catalytic centers of multisubunit DNA-dependent RNA polymerases. We show that RDR2 initiates 1-2 nucleotides (nt) internal to the 3’ ends of its templates and can transcribe the RNA of an RNA-DNA hybrid provided that 9 or more nucleotides at the RNA’s 3’ end is unpaired. Using a nucleic acid configuration that mimics the arrangement of RNA and DNA strands upon Pol IV transcriptional arrest, we show that displacement of the RNA 3’ end occurs as the DNA template and non-template strands reanneal, enabling RDR2 transcription. These results suggest a model in which Pol IV arrest and backtracking displaces the RNA 3’ end as the DNA strands reanneal, allowing RDR2 to engage the RNA and transcribe the second strand.SignificanceRDR2 is critical for siRNA-directed DNA methylation in Arabidopsis, functioning in physical association with DNA-dependent Pol IV to synthesize the second strands of double-stranded siRNA precursors. Basepairing between the DNA template strand transcribed by Pol IV and the nontemplate DNA strand is known to induce Pol IV arrest and Pol IV-RDR2 transcriptional coupling, but how this occurs is unknown. We report the structure of RDR2 and experimental evidence for how RDR2 engages its RNA templates and initiates transcription. RDR2 engages the ends of RNAs displaced from RNA-DNA hybrids, suggesting a model in which Pol IV arrest and backtracking, accompanied by DNA strand reannealing, extrudes the 3’ end of the Pol IV transcript, allowing RNA engagement and second-strand synthesis.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew Loffer ◽  
Jasleen Singh ◽  
Akihito Fukudome ◽  
Vibhor Mishra ◽  
Feng Wang ◽  
...  

In plants, selfish genetic elements including retrotransposons and DNA viruses are transcriptionally silenced by RNA-directed DNA methylation. Guiding the process are short interfering RNAs (siRNAs) cut by DICER-LIKE 3 (DCL3) from double-stranded precursors of ~30 bp synthesized by NUCLEAR RNA POLYMERASE IV (Pol IV) and RNA-DEPENDENT RNA POLYMERASE 2 (RDR2). We show that Pol IV initiating nucleotide choice, RDR2 initiation 1-2 nt internal to Pol IV transcript ends and RDR2 terminal transferase activity collectively yield a code that influences which end of the precursor is diced and whether 24 or 23 nt siRNAs are generated from the Pol IV or RDR2-transcribed strands. By diversifying the size, sequence, and strand polarity of siRNAs derived from a given precursor, alternative patterns of DCL3 dicing allow maximal siRNA coverage at methylated target loci.


Blood ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 132 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 4341-4341
Author(s):  
Masataka Taguchi ◽  
Hiroyuki Mishima ◽  
Yusuke Shiozawa ◽  
Chisa Hayashida ◽  
Akira Kinoshita ◽  
...  

Abstract Exposure to ionizing radiation is a well-established risk of cancer development. Atomic bomb (A-bomb) survivors were exposed to A-bomb radiation, then developed acute myeloid leukemia (AML), acute lymphoblastic leukemia, and chronic myeloid leukemia with the highest incidence around five to ten years after the bombing. On the other hand, the risk of myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) were significantly high among the survivors even after 40 to 60 years from the bombing (Iwanaga et al. J Clin Oncol 2011), indicating a long-lasting influence of A-bomb radiation on human hematopoiesis. In general, genetic mutations are found in almost all MDS, however, the landscape of genetic alterations in MDS among A-bomb survivors remains to be elucidated. To study the role of A-bomb radiation on the pathogenesis of MDS and related conditions, we analyzed 32 patients with MDS and 3 cases diagnosed as idiopathic cytopenia of undetermined significance (ICUS) among A-bomb survivors using next generation sequencing technologies and SNP array karyotyping. Patients were categorized into two groups by the exposure distance; proximally exposed group (PE-group, 18 patients, < 2.7 km from the hypocenter) and distally exposed group (DE-group, 17 patients, directly exposed in 2.7-10 km, or those who entered the bombing area [inside of 2 km from the hypocenter] within two weeks after the bombing [no acute radiation syndromes]). Median exposure distance was 1.1 and 3.4 km in PE- and DE-group, respectively (P < .001). There was no significant difference in sex, subtype of MDS, and ages at bombing and the diagnosis, between the two groups, whereas frequencies of abnormal karyotype (78% vs. 59%, P = .29) and complex karyotype (33% vs. 12%, P = .23) were higher in PE-group without statistical significance. Whole genome sequencing of three patients in PE-group revealed that most frequent nucleotide substitution was cytosine-to-thymine (C to T), which is a hallmark of age-related mutational changes. Using whole exome sequencing and 154 genes-targeted capture sequencing (T-S), we identified significant differences in mutated genes between the two groups. No patients of PE-group had mutations in TET2 although it was most frequently affected in DE-group (29% [5 out of 17 patients], P = .019), and the frequency of gene mutations in DNA methylation pathway was 5.6% (1 out of 18 patients) and 41% (7 out of 17) in PE- and DE-group, respectively (P = .018). TP53 and the genes coding RNA splicing factors (SFs) were mutated equally in both groups (TP53, 11% and 12% [P = 1]; SFs, 33% and 35% [P = 1] in PE- and DE-group, respectively). Copy number alterations were analyzed using SNP-array and T-S data. We found that loss of long arm of chromosome 11 (11q loss) was significantly accumulated in PE-group (33% [6 out of 18 patients] vs. 0%, P = .019), whereas loss of chromosome 5q and chromosome 7 were almost equally identified in both groups (chromosome 5q, 22% and 12% [P = .66]; chromosome 7, 22% and 29% [P = .71] in PE- and DE-group, respectively). On the commonly affected region of 11q in this study, there were three genes recurrently altered in MDS and AML; ATM, KMT2A, and CBL. Copy number loss was found in these three genes, and the alteration of ATM was significantly increased in PE-group (28% [5 out of 18 patients] vs. 0%, P = .046) than DE-group. The remaining allele of ATM also possessed a mutation in two out of five patients in PE-group, indicating a deleterious effect on the function of ATM. In summary, we revealed two unique genetic features in MDS among A-bomb survivors who were proximally exposed to A-bomb radiation; significantly less frequent mutations in DNA methylation pathway and significant accumulation of 11q loss, suggesting a long-lasting effect of ionizing radiation and an important role of 11q loss in the initiation of MDS. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


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